The Weekly Daf #236
Pesachim 2- 8
Week of 26 Av - 2 Ellul 5758 / 17 - 23 August 1998
Parshas Re'eh
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Good Neighbor Policy
It's Pesach and your home, thanks to the family's arduous efforts, is
completely free of chametz. In walks the son of your non-Jewish neighbor
who is munching on a sandwich while paying a courtesy visit. What should
be your reaction?
Your mind flashes back to the Torah command of "chametz should not be seen
by you" (Shemos 13:7) which is the source for so much of the halachic
discussion of this first section of Mesechta Pesachim. Is it then
forbidden to see the bread in your neighbor's sandwich?
This is an unnecessary concern. The Torah prohibited the possession of
chametz, not the viewing of it. The physical presence of this chametz in
your home also presents no problem because the Torah, in the aforementioned
passage, uses the term "by you" to signal that chametz in your precincts is
forbidden only if it is yours and not if it belongs to a non-Jew.
One problem does seem to stand in the way of your being a tolerant
neighbor. Rabbi Yehuda cites the ruling of the Sage Rav regarding a Jew
who has the chametz of a non-Jew in his home during Pesach. Even though he
has not violated the Torah prohibition on possessing chametz since he has
not assumed any responsibility for guarding it, he is required to erect a
barrier ten tefachim (approximately 38 inches) high in front of this
chametz so that he will remember not to eat from this forbidden food. Does
this same caution regarding a forgetful indulgence in chametz obligate you
to ask the sandwich-packing neighbor to leave your home?
The answer is supplied by a beraisa which clearly states that there is no
requirement for you to eliminate the chametz which a non-Jew brings into
your home. Rashi explains that this means that there is no requirement to
eject him from your home and the language of the Shulchan Aruch (Orach
Chaim 440:3) is: "There is no need to remove him from the home even though
the Jew sees the chametz."
The reason why we are not required to removed the neighbor as we are to
construct a barrier is that since the non-Jew is in complete control of the
sandwich, there is no concern that his Jewish neighbor will come to eat
from it as there is in a case where the chametz is only stored by the Jew.
* Pesachim 6a
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Two Divine Guarantees
"Those involved in fulfilling a mitzvah shall suffer no harm."
This guarantee of Divine protection from those performing a mitzvah (except
where there is a high probability of danger) is applied by our gemara to a
situation in which a Jew is searching for chametz in the rubble of a
collapsed wall in which food had previously been stored. Even though there
is the possibility of a scorpion lurking there, this would not have been
sufficient reason to exempt him from sticking his hand into the rubble to
search for chametz, even if he was simultaneously searching for a lost
needle in that pile. His ulterior motive does not detract from the fact
that he is also doing a mitzvah, and he is still privileged to enjoy
immunity from the low-probability of the danger of a scorpion.
As proof that a selfish motive does not deprive the performer of a mitzvah
of Divine protection the gemara cites a beraisa:
One who says `I am giving this money to charity in order that my sick son
should recover, or that I should merit reward in the World to Come' is
considered a completely righteous person."
But how, asks Tosefos, do we reconcile this with the counsel of the Sage
Antigonos of Socho (Pirkei Avos 1:3) to avoid serving Hashem for the
purpose of gaining reward?
Tosefos makes a distinction between the person who will regret having
performed the mitzvah if the expected reward is not forthcoming and the one
who will have no such regrets.
Could Tosefos not have offered a simpler solution, asks Maharsha, based on
the gemara (Mesechta Ta'anis 9a) that a person may test Hashem's promise of
reward when it comes to charity?
In that gemara it is clearly stated that although the Torah (Devarim 6:16)
warns us that "you must not test Hashem your G-d," one may test His
providence when it comes to charity, as the Prophet Malachi declares in
Hashem's name (Malachi 3:10): "Bring all of your tithes ... and test Me
with this ... whether I shall not open the windows of Heaven for you and
shower you with limitless prosperity."
This gemara would seemingly have provided Tosefos with a distinction
between performing other mitzvos with an ulterior motive, which is
discouraged in Pirkei Avos, and offering charity with a motive for reward,
which is encouraged by the Prophet Malachi. Tosefos' decision not to make
this distinction leads the Maharsha to the conclusion that the test of
Hashem regarding charity is limited to His promise of prosperity and not to
other rewards. The reason why the promise of prosperity is different is
explained by Maharsha in Mesechta Ta'anis (ibid.): Since human logic
cannot comprehend how giving away grain or money can possibly enrich rather
than impoverish, Hashem offered us this opportunity of actually seeing
Divine Providence meet the test of such supernatural power.
* Pesachim 8b
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